TheJakartaPost

Please Update your browser

Your browser is out of date, and may not be compatible with our website. A list of the most popular web browsers can be found below.
Just click on the icons to get to the download page.

Jakarta Post

Chalkboard computer teacher is international conference star

News Desk (Agence France-Presse)
Singapore, Singapore
Sat, March 17, 2018

Share This Article

Change Size

Chalkboard computer teacher is international conference star Ghanaian schoolteacher Richard Appiah Akoto speaks to AFP during an interview in Singapore on March 16, 2018. Akoto, a Ghanaian schoolteacher who used chalkboard drawings to teach computer science because his farming village had no laptops, found himself the star of a global conference in Singapore. Richard Appiah Akoto, who drew coloured chalk diagrams to teach impoverished rural pupils how a PC works, rubbed shoulders with Silicon Valley hotshots in the glitzy Asian tech hub. (AFP/Roslan Rahman)

A

Ghanaian schoolteacher who used chalkboard drawings to teach computer science because his farming village had no laptops found himself the star of a global conference in Singapore.

Richard Appiah Akoto, who drew coloured chalk diagrams to teach impoverished rural pupils how a PC works, rubbed shoulders with Silicon Valley hotshots in the glitzy Asian tech hub.

Akoto, who had never been outside of Ghana before, said he was invited to the Microsoft-sponsored meet after video of his jury-rigged lessons went viral.

Facebook users delighted in his intricately detailed computer screen -- replete with toolbar icons -- and his precisely decorated keyboard and mouse, which he drew for children who had never seen a computer before.

"Then I will just draw the mouse with the cord and I would say this is the mouse, this is the body and this is the tail of the mouse," he said.

As a teacher of information and communication technology (ICT) at a junior high school in the impoverished Sekyedomase farming village in Ghana, Akoto said he had to improvise because the school had no computer and his own laptop had broken down.

Read also: Australia-ASEAN summit: Give education a boost

After pictures of the class were uploaded, the global response was immediate, with pledges of donations pouring in.

"People started calling me... I said what trouble have I created for myself. But it's all good. At the end of the day, something good has come out from it," he said.

One donor from Britain donated a laptop, and a Ghanaian IT firm gave five desktops to the school and another laptop for Akoto.

When the students saw the computers for the first time, they were excited but they already knew the parts from his drawings, Akoto said.

After a three-day conference in Singapore, at which he was given a standing ovation, the 33-year-old said the donations meant he would never have to resort to a chalkboard again.

"I hope to get more computers so that every student will be behind one," he said Friday.

"I also hope that the other surrounding schools who are also lacking like my school, we hope to get more so that we also give them (computers) to help in their teaching of ICT."

Your Opinion Matters

Share your experiences, suggestions, and any issues you've encountered on The Jakarta Post. We're here to listen.

Enter at least 30 characters
0 / 30

Thank You

Thank you for sharing your thoughts. We appreciate your feedback.